Andrea Young is the Executive Director of the 22,000 member American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia. She is a life-long advocate for civil and human rights. Under her leadership, the ACLU of Georgia has reimagined its work on a framework integrating legal action, policy, advocacy, civic engagement, and communications.
Prior to taking the helm of the statewide affiliate of the ACLU in January 2017, Young was an Adjunct Professor at the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University. For many years, she served as executive director at the Andrew J. Young Foundation producing a nationally-syndicated series of documentary films and other programs on themes of civil and human rights.
Young has devoted her career to promoting policies to defend and extend civil and human rights. Young served as Legislative Assistant to Senator Edward Kennedy contributing to significant civil rights and international policy including the Martin Luther King Holiday Act and South Africa sanctions legislation. She later worked with the United Church of Christ in global mission and advocacy, returning to the Capitol to serve as Chief of Staff for the first woman to represent Georgia in Congress, Cynthia McKinney. She served as Vice President for External Affairs for Planned Parenthood of Metropolitan Washington, defending a woman’s right to reproductive healthcare. As Vice President of the National Black Child Development Institute, Young led a school readiness initiative that increased local investments in early care and education and led to a commitment to universal pre-kindergarten in Washington, DC.
Young is the author of Life Lessons My Mother Taught Me; co-author of Andrew Young and the Making of Modern Atlanta and collaborated with former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young in writing, editing, and researching An Easy Burden: Civil Rights and the Transformation of America. She has been recognized, nationally, for her work as an advocate for civil and human rights.
Young has received awards for her work from Georgia State, Emory University, several NAACP Chapters; the YWCA of Metropolitan Atlanta; and many others. She has also been recognized as Georgia Trend’s 100 Most Influential Georgians, Atlanta Magazines’ 500 Most Powerful Atlantans, and is the recipient of the 2023 Elaine B. Alexander Roses for Roe Lifetime Achievement Award. She is a board member of the National Center for Civil and Human Rights and the Dean’s Council of Georgia State’s Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.
Young is a graduate of Swarthmore College and received her law degree from Georgetown University School of Law. Young is married to attorney and art consultant, Jerry Thomas. She has one daughter and one granddaughter.